If You Build It, Will They Come? A Quasi-experiment of Sidewalk Improvements and Physical Activity.

IF 2.2 Q3 SPORT SCIENCES
Gregory Knell, Casey P Durand, Kerem Shuval, Harold W Kohl, Deborah Salvo, Abiodun Olyuomi, Kelley Pettee Gabriel
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Improving sidewalks could lead to more physical activity through improved access, while providing a safe and defined space to walk. Yet, findings on the association between sidewalks and physical activity are inconclusive.

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to examine changes in self-reported and accelerometer-derived physical activity associated with living near recently improved sidewalks in a diverse, community-based sample from the Houston Travel Related Activity in Neighborhoods (TRAIN) Study.

Methods: Data are from 430 adults and include baseline and first annual follow-up (2014-2017). Fully adjusted, two-step regression models were built to test the hypothesis that living near (within 250-meters) an improved sidewalk was associated with greater levels of physical activity than not living near an improved sidewalk.

Results: The majority of participants were female, non-Hispanic black, low income, low education, and nearly half lived near at least one improved sidewalk. After adjustment, among participants reporting some physical activity, living near two sidewalk improvements was associated with 1.6 times more minutes per week of walking and leisure-time physical activity than those not living near a sidewalk improvement (p<0.05). Based on accelerometry, which does not specifically quantify domain-specific physical activity, there were no significant associations.

Conclusion: Although these mixed findings warrant further research, results suggest that improving sidewalks may have an effect on participants' physical activity. Nonspecific definitions of sidewalk improvements could be contributing to type 1 error. Future work should also examine behavioral interventions alongside changes to the built environment to determine the effects on physical activity.

如果你建了,他们会来吗?人行道改善与体育活动的准实验。
改善人行道可以通过改善通行条件来增加体育锻炼,同时提供一个安全、明确的步行空间。目的:本研究的目的是通过休斯顿社区旅行相关活动(TRAIN)研究中的一个多样化社区样本,研究居住在最近改善的人行道附近的居民在自我报告和加速计衍生的体育活动方面的变化:数据来自 430 名成年人,包括基线和第一次年度随访(2014-2017 年)。我们建立了经过充分调整的两步回归模型,以检验以下假设:居住在改善后的人行道附近(250 米内)的人比不居住在改善后的人行道附近的人有更多的体育活动:大多数参与者为女性、非西班牙裔黑人、低收入、低学历,近一半人居住在至少一条改良人行道附近。经过调整后,在报告进行了一些体育活动的参与者中,居住在两条改善人行道附近的人每周步行和闲暇体育活动的时间是居住在未改善人行道附近的人的 1.6 倍(p 结论:尽管这些结果参差不齐,但仍值得进一步研究:虽然这些结果参差不齐,值得进一步研究,但研究结果表明,改善人行道可能会对参与者的体育活动产生影响。人行道改善的定义不具体,可能会导致第一类错误。未来的工作还应该在改变建筑环境的同时研究行为干预措施,以确定对体育锻炼的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
1.60
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